Hypertension Case Study - KeithRN
Heart Failure Clinical Reasoning Case Study
FACULTY KEY (answers in italics)
Mr. Kelly
Chief Complaint/History of Present Illness:
It has now been 3 years since Mr. Kelly has been discharged from the hospital for CAD & MI. He is now 56 years old. He has not had any recurrent CP, but has had to sleep with 3 pillows to keep from becoming SOB at night the last 2 weeks. He has had difficulty getting his shoes on the last month because of increased swelling around his ankles. He forgets to take his medications every day but does at least 4-5 times a week. He weighs himself once a week and today his weight has increased from 255 lbs. to 264 lbs. the last 7 days. He makes an appt. through his clinic when he becomes concerned that he is now becoming SOB at rest and is more fatigued. The clinic physician recognizes that he will need acute inpatient care and cooridinates a direct admission to the hospital by EMS.
Past Medical History:
• HTN,
• Hyperlipidemia
• CAD
• MI
• DM-type II
Home Medications:
• Simvastatin 20 mg po daily
• Glyburide 10 mg po daily
• HCTZ 50 mg po daily
• Lisinopril 20 mg po daily
• ASA 81 mg po daily
• Fish oil 1000 mg po 2 tabs daily
Social/personal history
Lives alone in own home. He is divorced with three grown children. He has had to cut back working to only 4 hours a day as a mechanic because of fatigue and weakness since the first of the year.
Mr. Kelly arrives to your telemetry unit
You are the telemetry floor nurse and you have just received him as a direct admit. You review his history through the electronic medical record. The paramedics relate the above story of why he is being admitted.
Current Status:
Admission VS:
o T:98.4
o P:126-regular
o R:28/labored
o BP:184/108
o O2 sats:90% 2l per n/c
Admission Nursing Assessment:
o CV: pale, cool to the touch. Pulses 2+ throughout. 2-3+ pitting edema lower extremities
o Resp: course crackles scattered throughout both lung fields. Labored resp. effort
o Neuro: anxious, a/o x4
o GI/GU: WNL
What data above is important and relevant that must be recognized as clinically significant to the nurse?
• HR 126-Pale cool to the touch
• 2-3+ pitting edema
• Coarse crackles in both lungs
• Rr/28-Labored resp effort
• 90% on RA
• Anxious
Rationale:
o HR 126-Pale cool to the touch…sympathetic nervous system stimulation to maintain cardiac output…remember CO=SVxHR
o 2-3+ pitting edema…fluid volume overload with left sided HF transferring over and causing biventricular failure (both right and left failure)
o Coarse crackles in both lungs…increased hydrostatic pressure in pulmonary vessels due to left sided HF that results in fluid in the alveolar space
o Rr/28-Labored resp effort…see above
o 90% on RA…see above
o Anxious likely related to hypoxia and resp. distress sue to acute pulmonary edema secondary to HF
Clinical Reasoning Begins…
1. Based on the data you have collected, what is your primary concern right now?
In obvious resp distress that must be addressed but the UNDERLYING cause must be addressed in order to remedy this effectively. NEED TO IMMEDIATELY DECREASE THE WORKLOAD OF THE HEART by getting rid of excess fluid volume (reducing preload)
2. What is the underlying rationale/patho of this concern?
Fluid volume overload that must be immediately addressed as the heart is unable to indefinently maintain this pace as a tired pump. To accomplish this clinical objective need to reduce the cardiac output determinant of preload (volume reduction through diuresis) and lower afterload (systolic BP) to decrease the resistance that the LV needs to overcome to pump each contraction to the body. By lowering afterload and systolic BP you can immediately decrease the workload and stress of the heart.
3. What medical or nursing interventions will you initiate based on this priority concern?
Preload reduction-accomplished through aggressive diuresis-usually a loop diuretic such as Furosemide (Lasix)
Afterload reduction-accomplished through medications that directly/indirectly lower systolic BP that can include Nitroglycerin gtt/or subl. or patch depending on severity.
Nursing interventions will focus on the need for frequent assessment of response to these therapies including urine output, systolic BP and resp. assessment data.
4. Is there any more nursing assessment data or information you need?
A 12 lead EKG is essential to determine if current decompensation was influenced by another Acute MI or is primary heart failure
5. What nursing diagnostic statement(s) will guide your plan of care?
a. What will be your nursing interventions based on this concern?
IMPAIRED GAS EXCHANGE
• increase O2 to to at least 4l and assess response
• Continually monitor O2 sats
• Frequently monitor RR and resp status
• place on cardiac monitor, ensure patency and adequacy of PIV
EXCESS FLUID VOLUME
• Contact MD for SBAR…what is your recommendation to physician???
• Consider foley catheter
INEFFECTIVE CARDIAC TISSUE PERFUSION
• Monitor HR-BP closely-Need to watch AFTERLOAD and reduce!!!
• Need to decrease workload of the heart. In addition to Lasix what other meds are needed?
o NTG as a gtt
ANXIETY
Morphine or Ativan
6. What is the worst possible complication to anticipate?
Will continue to deteriorate and will require Bi-pap or possible intubation to prevent resp arrest
7. What nursing assessment(s) will you need to initiate to identify and respond quickly if this complication develops?
Assess RR and effort of breathing
Assess HR and any dysrhythmias that may present or if tachycardia continues to be present
Assess O2 sats and amount of oxygenation needed
Assessment of breath sounds frequently
Optional QSEN/National Patient Safety Goals Questions:
What can you as the nurse do to demonstrate intentional caring and promote patient centered care with sensitivity and respect for your patient in the context of this clinical presentation?
(QSEN-Patient Centered care)
How can you as the nurse ensure and assess the effectiveness of communication with the patient and family?
(QSEN-Patient Centered care)
What simple steps must the nurse initiate to reduce the risk of any health care-associated infections while the patient is in the hospital?
(2011 Hospital National Patient Safety Goals-#7)
Foam in/foam out (frequent hand hygiene). Identify need for contact precautions based on prior documentation of MRSA, VRE or c. diff
8. What type of HF does Mr. Kelly likely have based on his previous documented history?
Biventricular…left sided initially that progressed to right
9. Compare & contrast patho and symptoms of left sided vs. right sided HF.
a. Left side:
Most common
• Impaired LV function blood pressure backs up into left atrium and pulmonary veins
• Increased pressure causes fluid from capillary bed to leak into alveoli with resultant pulmonary edema
SX:respiratory
Tachypnea
SOB
Anxious
Pale-cool clammy
Coarse crackles-rhonchi/wheezing…may be audible
Elevated HR-BP
b. Right side: Most common cause is LVF
Backup of blood on right side due to RV failure causes venous congestion
SX
JVD
Peripheral edema
Cor pulmonale if hx COPD
10. What clinical manifestations did Mr. Kelly present with that are consistent with biventricular HF?
Fatigue, weakness, orthopnea, edema, fluid retention with edema, SOB
11. What are other manifestations that also can be seen in HF?
CP, behaviorial changes-increased restlessness or confusion
The cardiologist is on the floor and you update her with your history and current assessment findings. She orders the following medications:
• Furosemide (Lasix) 40 mg IV x1
• Nitrodur patch 0.4 mg topically
• Digoxin 0.25mg po
• Hydralazine 10-20 mg IV prn for SBP >150
• Lorazepam 1 mg po every 4 hours for anxiety
12. Describe the rationale for each of these interventions:
PPT Med Rationale
a. Furosemide-aggressive diuresis-get rid of volume quickly
b. Nitrodur-venous dilator-displace excess volume through decreasing PRELOAD
c. Digoxin-improve CO by increasing contractility
d. Hydralazine-decrease workload of heart through AFTERLOAD reduction
e. Lorazepam-decrease anxiety-decrease HR- which will decrease workload of the heart
13. Describe the action, side effects, nursing implications, and pt. education for each of these medications:
a. Furosemide
CATEGORY: Loop diuretic
ACTION-inhibits Na reabsorption in the loop of henle-excretes water, Na, K, Mg
SE-hypotension, low K, Mg, Na
NSG IMP-assess fluid status-I&O-daily wt, monitor electrolytes, BP, fall risk in elderly
PT ED-ortho changes, foods high in K+
b. Nitrodur
CATEGORY:Nitrate
ACTION-dilates coronary arteries…vasodilates venous> arterial…PRELOAD OR AFTERLOAD reducer??? Decreases cardiac O2 consumption
SE-dizzinesss-HA-hypotension-tachycardia
NSG IMP-monitor BP-HR closely after giving. Rotate patch sites daily-off at bedtime
PT ED-risk of ortho hypotension-HA common-tablets should be replaced q 6 months and avoid heat-humidity, keep in dark bottle to prevent breakdown
c. Digoxin
CATEGORY:Cardiac Glycosides
ACTION-increases force of myocardial contraction-positive inotropic effect, slows AV node conduction
SE-fatigue, brady, anorexia, N&V
NSG IMP-monitor AP 1” before giving,hold if HR ................
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